When using the (Wildlife Habitat Incentives Program) and receiving funding for the land, does a land opener have to open the land up to the public for so many years? Does anyone know how this works? I'm not sure I'm interested in having the general public use my private land.
It would help to know what State your property is located in. That way, people from that state can tell you about some of the programs that they may have used in that state.
For instance, we have property in Indiana. We bought some land back in 1989 and we contacted the state forester. He came out, did a survey of the property and told us what types of trees, shrubs, etc... were already on it, what types of soils we had and what types of trees, shrubs would do well in those soil types. On our little 20 acres, there were three distinct areas: one field in sand, one established woodlot and one field in muck. He developed plans for us to reforest the two fields and manage the existing woodlot. He did all of this for free. Then he got us in contact with a private forester who purchased trees for reforesting from state nurseries, planted those trees and side sprayed them for weeds. The state forester inspected the private foresters work, made sure it followed the plans, we paid the private forester and the state reimbursed us for 75% of the cost!

The only stipulations were we could not plant a Christmas tree farm and we had to either side spray the trees or mow the weeds once a year for five years. After that, we could do whatever we wanted with the trees. It worked out great.
So, after hearing your ideas to break the property into zones, the state forester will be better able to identify those zones for you, show you the good stuff you already have, show you how to enhance and manage it, show you your soil types, suggest different species for those soil types, identify any micro-climates that may exist on your property. Sometimes states also have biologists that will help you with wildlife management, lake enhancement and maintenance, fish stocking, etc...
With it being old mining, you may qualify for programs to reduce erosion, stabilize soil, reforest, game bird habitat, etc...
The possibilities are huge. Contact your county extension agent first. They can put you in touch with your state foresters and biologists and they usually know about any programs available in your state/county. :thumbsup: